Well, this is not like the one echoed from an aircraft carrier and certainly doesn’t signal an end to our fight against coastal erosion. Over the past week, as the 2009 hurricane season opened, our mission to raise greater awareness and celebrate the value and wonders of America’s WETLAND was achieved. The end of a long trek by boat from Florida to Louisiana culminated with emotional and uplifting events in New Orleans, Houma and Lake Charles, Louisiana.
In New Orleans on Saturday afternoon, May 30th, hundreds danced and sang along with soul legend, Irma Thomas, Rockin’ Dopsie, Jr., And the Hot 8 Brass Band. When evening fell and Irma belted out ‘Rollin on the River’ amid images of a paddle wheeler framed by the Mighty Mississippi and the concert stage, all were on their feet paying homage to the mother of all rivers. It was a memorable sight and the spirit of determination and resiliency was in the air. Wetlands flags, hats, shirts, signs were everywhere among the crowd of old and young alike; babies on father’s shoulders and couples dancing in the glorious sunshine. Women of the Storm made Thomas an official member and WWL-TV senior news anchor Dennis Woltering accepted the America’s WETLAND Foundation (AWF) Conservationist of the Year award for his steadfast media coverage of wetland and environmental issues.
The next day began early as Women of the Storm and AWF Chair King Milling boarded the ‘Storm Rider’ and we headed West along the Intracoastal Waterway to meet a flotilla of boats heading to the Houma rally and concert. The same was true of the Eastern contingency headed by a WWII landing craft and Port Fourchon director Ted Falgout on a grand houseboat carrying a raucous throng of rally-goers. As we entered Bayou Terrebonne where it connects with the ICWW, my mother and father, Pops and Lil Marmillion, waited under the bridge waving heartily for their 90+ years. It was a family day for many of us there, as blankets and lawn chairs filled the concert green, and my sisters and brother, nieces and nephews entertained friends on the boat. My partner, Juan, held the cameo moment, sounding the five horn emergency signal at 2:00pm in an eerie silence that signaled the danger faced by coastal residents. A minute of spontaneous fog, boat, and car horns created a thunderous sound as kids jumped up and down and old timers clapped or screamed their warning that this precious place settled by a unique French Cajun culture should not be allowed to die. Zydeko, Country, Reggae and Cajun music filled the talent line-up and again families sprang to their feet to dance and Harley riders roared in on cue to punctuate the drama of the moment. It will be a day long remembered by all. My journey’s end brought me back to my roots to receive the Key to the Parish from President Michel Claudet. US Senator Mary Landrieu accepted an AWF Special Achievement Award and State Senator Reggie Dupre the AWF Lifetime Achievement honor. We ended our Journey moving the boat for it’s week’s rest at the home of AWF Board Member Berwick Duval and his wife, Alexis, two fellow-boaters who we had earlier met up with in Marco Island, FL. We would travel by car Sunday night to end the events on June 1st in Lake Charles, LA, with and AWF America’s Energy Coast hearing on coastal cultural vulnerabilities, hosted by Lake Charles Mayor and AWF Board member, Randy Roach. All of these major events in three back-to-back days, attracting widespread media coverage and thousands in person, hundreds of thousands on TV, would not have been possible without heroic efforts by the Marmillion + Company staff. So, kudos to each and every one.
The final days were not without drama, as most boating is. New Orleans is known for its share of characters and the dock mistress at the Orleans Marina proved to have her nasty sails up, pulling rank and shutting down a TV live interview by New Orleans Channel 26 at 5:30 am. She and her rent-a-cop security detail were rude and crude to the point that boaters should avoid her at all risks. We heard from others that she viewed the marina as “her marina,” which between her “my” this and “I” that she was full of herself in this public marina, much to the disservice of a city needing the tourism and,yes, boaters trade to flourish. On the return trip, Landry’s Restaurant was good enough to give us dockage in an area of very few options. And a final note about passage through New Orleans by boat-leave yourself plenty of time. Unlike everywhere else we encountered, NOLA locks down bridges for over two hours at a time right adjacent to locks that let you down from the river right at the bridges foot. Go figure. We had to wait two hours and fifteen minutes to pass, which sends another bad signal to the boating community. Oh, well, what can I say? We pushed out of Lake Pontchartrain to start a glorious weekend arriving in Biloxi on Saturday night. We called ahead to the Hard Rock Hotel to make sure we could work out in their gym and clean up for a night of good dining and entertainment. Once again, in this Gulf area needed to get back on its feet we ran into another sour puss, this time the Hard Rock Hotel Health Club manager who was sour and rude, refusing to let us enter even after the front desk manager rang and told him she had offered us passage. If you want to know more, go to my blog entry on Trip Advisor for details and I would stay away from the Hard Rock, if you are a boater. Maybe with so much negative energy brought by the storms, some folks have settled into a funk that’s hard to break—and I guess that is part of this story as well. It is time to get on with the positive, ban together and reignite the excitement of these wonderful ports of call.
Time to call it a wrap. We’ve had a wonderful voyage and met the delightful folks of the Gulf Coast. Thanks to so many dockmasters, media representatives and everyday folk who dropped by the Storm Rider curious about our story and to wish us and saving the wetlands well. We’ve heard from some of you who followed the blog and we’re on board for the weekends now enjoying a relaxing return, arriving back in Ft. Lauderdale following 4th of July in the Keys. To all who helped to make the voyage possible and to the best Engineer a boat could have, Juan the first mate, I say muchas gracias and til next time, Happy Sails from the “Storm Rider!

The Queen of Soul "Irma Thomas"

……….Stay tuned for more pictures to come!





































































































































